have the love sponge and the hulkster patched things up
― Matt Armstrong, Saturday, 11 July 2015 23:23 (ten years ago)
$100 million is a lot of money and I don't think the crime of broadcasting hogan's porn tape is a sufficient one to put a media company out of business (tho here it might operate in the sense of capone getting nailed for tax evasion). i do think tho that a media outlet shouldn't have the right to broadcast a celebrity's sex tape. i don't think the argument that bc hogan already talked about his sex life that gives the media open game to broadcast footage of him naked + participating in a sex act. even celebrities deserve some level of privacy and nothing anyone does, save signing away the right to broadcast footage of them having sex, should sign away the right to broadcast footage of them having sex.
― Mordy, Saturday, 11 July 2015 23:40 (ten years ago)
I'd love to hear an argument for how this particular situation differs substantially from revenge porn.
― Something Called Fudge (Old Lunch), Sunday, 12 July 2015 00:06 (ten years ago)
publishing the sex tape is indisputably constitutional. it's sort of a dick move though and fans of gawker might wish their publication had a bit more of a conscience
― wisdom be leakin out my louche douche truths (k3vin k.), Sunday, 12 July 2015 00:10 (ten years ago)
I'm not sure if it is constitutional. I'd think the right to privacy would protect you from someone publicizing your private sexual content.
― Mordy, Sunday, 12 July 2015 00:18 (ten years ago)
― Something Called Fudge (Old Lunch), Saturday, July 11, 2015 8:06 PM (27 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
i guess i've only heard 'revenge porn' in the context of being an emotionally motivated, vindictive act, and i got the impression Bubba The Love Sponge and his wife leaked the tape for profit? not prepared to die on that hill, just saying.
― some dude, Sunday, 12 July 2015 01:08 (ten years ago)
― Mordy, Sunday, July 12, 2015 12:18 AM (53 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
what did the founders think about revenge porn: a SCOTUSblog symposium
― Matt Armstrong, Sunday, 12 July 2015 01:13 (ten years ago)
i do think tho that a media outlet shouldn't have the right to broadcast a celebrity's sex tape.
the right at stake here is not the absolute right to "broadcast sex tapes" but the right to publish true and newsworthy things. the specific nature of this true and newsworthy thing is only relevant to the extent that it makes people squeamish and therefore more likely to side against the first amendment rights of a publisher.
― max, Sunday, 12 July 2015 01:29 (ten years ago)
i do highly recommend reading the links i posted above which might help clarify a) how this differs substantially from "revenge porn" and b) why all precedent and legal thought establishes gawkers constitutional right to publish this (and why the case will eventually be ruled in gawkers favor on appeal even if the floridian jury rules against it in this case)
― max, Sunday, 12 July 2015 01:34 (ten years ago)
did we talk about this one anywhere? it gave me a lot of food for thought to chew on
http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/users/2015/06/hulk_hogan_sues_gawker_celebrity_sex_tapes_used_to_thrill_us_now_they_trouble.html
― some dude, Sunday, 12 July 2015 02:54 (ten years ago)
is the woman in the video also a celebrity
guess she is now, anyway
― mookieproof, Sunday, 12 July 2015 06:42 (ten years ago)
Denton considers the Hogan tape not only newsworthy, but in keeping with Gawker’s long-running editorial ethos. “Why does this company exist?” he said. “This company exists because journalists kept secrets amongst themselves. They passed them around as gossip.”For instance, he noted that it had been widely known in Manhattan's media world that CNN anchor Anderson Cooper was gay and yet, unlike Gawker, other news organizations didn’t disclose that detail of the journalist’s life.
Really hung up on that "scoop"
― Matt Armstrong, Sunday, 12 July 2015 07:54 (ten years ago)
is the woman in the video also a celebrityguess she is now, anyway
^^
― from batman to balloon dog (carl agatha), Sunday, 12 July 2015 13:22 (ten years ago)
publishing true things and distributing private video seem like two different things imo
― Joan Crawford Loves Chachi, Sunday, 12 July 2015 13:49 (ten years ago)
i do highly recommend reading the links i posted above which might help clarify
The thing is I have now read those links and wherever this thing ends up legally it still seems like this organization is unbelievably scummy and should largely be ashamed of itself
― Your Ribs are My Ladder, Sunday, 12 July 2015 15:25 (ten years ago)
the new york times helped talk the country into war and employs ppl who relentlessly promote policies to transfer wealth from the poor to the super rich :)
― lag∞n, Sunday, 12 July 2015 15:29 (ten years ago)
feel like publishing the sex tape is bad and creepy but also most of the proam media critics itt are wholesale consumers of media respectability politics and are basically dramatically ripping back the curtain to reveal gawkers public mission statement
― lag∞n, Sunday, 12 July 2015 15:39 (ten years ago)
btw max did u read my technology writing this week https://medium.com/@on3ness can i be the new vallywag thx i am srs abt this
― lag∞n, Sunday, 12 July 2015 15:40 (ten years ago)
fallacy of relative privation there lag∞n
― Joan Crawford Loves Chachi, Sunday, 12 July 2015 15:52 (ten years ago)
i suspect u misconstrue my point
― lag∞n, Sunday, 12 July 2015 15:54 (ten years ago)
i think yr point is a creepy one that max + gawker are making as well which is that ppl's discomfort over gawker publishing someone's private sex footage against their wishes is related to their being "squeamish," or "consumers of media respectability politics," and not that they are reacting to the humiliating wound of having yr genitalia shown to the world against yr wishes. one of the articles tried to compare this case to the Flynt cases but Hustler wasn't publishing ppl's photos against their knowledge + will. they were selling smut. that's why ppl who opposed hustler were squeamish. that's not why ppl are disgusted by the hogan sex tape publication. it's esp rich on ilx to accuse ppl of ignoring Judith Miller talking the country into war, as though they dislike the sex story but they don't care about the crime of the iraq war.
― Mordy, Sunday, 12 July 2015 16:01 (ten years ago)
nope
― lag∞n, Sunday, 12 July 2015 16:02 (ten years ago)
"the new york times helped talk the country into war and employs ppl who relentlessly promote policies to transfer wealth from the poor to the super rich :)"
"but also most of the proam media critics itt are wholesale consumers of media respectability politics and are basically dramatically ripping back the curtain to reveal gawkers public mission statement"
there's def an attempt to accuse ppl of hypocrisy here, and maybe also yr channelling deej's insane ongoing argument that if you intend to be an asshole it's not as bad that you are one
― Mordy, Sunday, 12 July 2015 16:04 (ten years ago)
i guess what im personally interested in is like what are these media organizations formal missions and more informal cultural ethos and do they align, and are their morally dubious articles legitimate products of that or are they misfires, do they point out inherent flaws in their ways of doing business or are they acceptable collateral damage, does gawker correct something in the way the times does business, is there any news org that has ever not published bad things, shld those bad things be seen as a like a veto over their entire output or what
― lag∞n, Sunday, 12 July 2015 16:13 (ten years ago)
i think it's pretty clear that the publication of hogan sex footage aligns completely w/ gawker's ethos. it's not that having done a bad thing, that one bad thing should veto their entire output, but that this particular bad thing is symptomatic of an ideology that produces loads of bad things.
― Mordy, Sunday, 12 July 2015 16:15 (ten years ago)
i do think gawkers ethos of correcting media respectability politics is a valuable idea, as to whether is actually plays out well on the whole is imo a pretty complicated question
― lag∞n, Sunday, 12 July 2015 16:15 (ten years ago)
this ethos has always been a part of gawker, and predates any afaik, ilx participation in the website
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2-avakrRUaU
― Mordy, Sunday, 12 July 2015 16:17 (ten years ago)
but like what is loads, is it a higher % than other orgs or is it just of a less socially acceptable type, does is serve a purpose, how much of what they do is good xp
― lag∞n, Sunday, 12 July 2015 16:17 (ten years ago)
i don't think that being concerned about ppl's privacy - even celebrities (tho to a smaller extent than civilians) - is a good critique of the media. and i don't think squeamishness about publishing someone's sex tape against their wishes is a sign of media respectability. it could be that gawker does other things that are worthwhile in terms of critiquing mainstream media, but this isn't one of those things imo.
― Mordy, Sunday, 12 July 2015 16:18 (ten years ago)
Hopefully the Gawker corrective will lead to respectable media outlets mining comments sections for stories.
― Most Scientifically Beautiful Face (President Keyes), Sunday, 12 July 2015 16:20 (ten years ago)
― lag∞n, Sunday, July 12, 2015 8:39 AM
nabisco mode unlocked
― resulting post (rogermexico.), Sunday, 12 July 2015 16:20 (ten years ago)
like gawker's mission (if it does exist) against imperialism and capitalist exploitation is not the same as its mission to publish titillating stories about celebrities. it's bizarre to conflate the two as if the same animating principle of honesty + transparency is behind both and you can't have one w/out the other.
― Mordy, Sunday, 12 July 2015 16:21 (ten years ago)
seems the idea gawker is operating off of is less abt media critique although obvs they do that too but rather taking that media critique and building ones publication standards around it, the idea being that the media as a whole is keeping info from the public based on cultural norms that are way too uh normalized across the industry, creating a distorted landscape this is to no small extent about wanting to be seen as respectable authorities xp
― lag∞n, Sunday, 12 July 2015 16:24 (ten years ago)
so rather than rely on yr own culturally mediate disgression u just publish everything lol
― lag∞n, Sunday, 12 July 2015 16:27 (ten years ago)
professionals want to be seen as respectable authorities and the way they do that is by adopting standards in their profession that track w/ what the general culture sees as appropriate behavior. there might be doctors that are frustrated w/ various ways that their industry impedes their abilities to, idk, use untested medication on patients, give assisted suicide, disclose hipaa information, etc, and in places where we may agree w/ a particular difference w/ the standards we may agree or disagree w/ a particular dr's decision to fight against them. but gawker takes a host of very valuable standards - don't out people w/out their permission, don't post naked pictures of them without permission, don't run stories w/out having them confirmed by a reliable source (or two!), don't violate the privacy of civilians without a strong public interest, etc - and tosses them out and you want us to talk about whether in a general sense challenging media standards is a good thing. like, no, it isn't. maybe some standards are worth challenging but it's not a totally failed institution. it's a good thing that the NYT doesn't touch most of the stories gawker does. the media would be infinitely poorer if outlets adopted gawker's standards.
― Mordy, Sunday, 12 July 2015 16:28 (ten years ago)
why do we have to pick? isn't it a better landscape when the times is the times and gawker is gawker
― got bent (mild cheezed off vibes) (s.clover), Sunday, 12 July 2015 16:31 (ten years ago)
don't out people w/out their permission, don't post naked pictures of them without permission, don't run stories w/out having them confirmed by a reliable source (or two!), don't violate the privacy of civilians without a strong public interest, etc
the thing is Mordy's right. those are good standards unless there's a greater-good argument - if one had needed a Nixon sex tape to break Watergate open, say. most good-practices journalism stuff is pretty glaringly obvious. whether it's illegal or not, separate question, I suspect it's protected speech, but "I'm allowed to do this" is a poor defense of shitty behavior
― Joan Crawford Loves Chachi, Sunday, 12 July 2015 17:00 (ten years ago)
mordy otm
― wisdom be leakin out my louche douche truths (k3vin k.), Sunday, 12 July 2015 17:10 (ten years ago)
and you want us to talk about whether in a general sense challenging media standards is a good thing. like, no, it isn't.
― Mordy, Sunday, July 12, 2015 12:28 PM (58 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
okkkkkkkk
― lag∞n, Sunday, 12 July 2015 17:28 (ten years ago)
our media has actually failed the country and indeed the entire world repeatedly extremely badly in a very predicable way
― lag∞n, Sunday, 12 July 2015 17:30 (ten years ago)
i agree that the hulkster suit is a clash of cultures. rich lunkhead bro culture vs rich white dudes from academia culture.
― Cory Sklar, Sunday, 12 July 2015 17:32 (ten years ago)
and of course when you make an assumption that standards do not need challenging that is by default pro status quo
― lag∞n, Sunday, 12 July 2015 17:34 (ten years ago)
it is a not interested in learning position
― lag∞n, Sunday, 12 July 2015 17:36 (ten years ago)
This all looks v strange from the uk where the post-leveson outcome that creeps can go on rooting thru sienna millers trash is part of an overall victory for precisely this damaging status quo
― the story of ilm: an ottyssey (wins), Sunday, 12 July 2015 17:36 (ten years ago)
the comparison to standards of medical science is extremely absurd
― lag∞n, Sunday, 12 July 2015 17:37 (ten years ago)
but gawker takes a host of very valuable standards - don't out people w/out their permission, don't post naked pictures of them without permission, don't run stories w/out having them confirmed by a reliable source (or two!), don't violate the privacy of civilians without a strong public interest, etc
― Mordy, Sunday, July 12, 2015 12:28 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
always be suspicious of arguments that are interested in rules over principals
― lag∞n, Sunday, 12 July 2015 17:38 (ten years ago)
like I'm sure that after this period of bold media self-examination the only difference will be more gawking xxp
― the story of ilm: an ottyssey (wins), Sunday, 12 July 2015 17:39 (ten years ago)
― lag∞n, Sunday, July 12, 2015 6:38 PM (5 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
assuming you meant "principle", isn't mordy saying they're v valuable as a result of underlying principles & not arbitrarily just cause they're the rules?
― the story of ilm: an ottyssey (wins), Sunday, 12 July 2015 17:46 (ten years ago)
looks like a list of rules to me
― lag∞n, Sunday, 12 July 2015 17:47 (ten years ago)
oh damn you're right
― the story of ilm: an ottyssey (wins), Sunday, 12 July 2015 17:48 (ten years ago)